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/ 7 December 2005
Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki appeared set on Wednesday to name a new government to replace the Cabinet he fired en masse last month after the embarrassing rejection of a new Constitution he backed. The expected announcement is hoped to bring an end to a two-week crisis of authority in the East African nation.
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/ 5 December 2005
A strong earthquake shook Central and East Africa on Monday, causing buildings to sway in at least six nations near its epicentre on the border between Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo. No damage or injuries were immediately reported from the temblor that registered 7,5 on the Richter scale.
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/ 5 December 2005
The trial in Nairobi of six men, including a priest, accused of murdering a septugenarian Italian bishop in central Kenya earlier this year hit a snag on Monday when one of the defendents claimed to have lost his hearing under police torture. Over prosecution objections, Nairobi High Court Nicholas Ombinja adjourned the trial, which had been scheduled to start on Monday.
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/ 1 December 2005
<img src="http://www.mg.co.za/ContentImages/257998/special_rep_icon_template.jpg" align=left>With only a quarter of Kenyans who need anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs) receiving them from the government, the race is on to ensure that many more people get treatment to fend off Aids-related diseases. But ARV recipients also need enough, good food, without which ARVs cannot work properly.
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/ 29 November 2005
Nobel Peace laureate Wangari Maathai on Tuesday urged Kenya’s bickering political leaders to show restraint in a crisis of authority that has raised fears of unrest in East Africa’s most stable nation. She urged Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and the opposition to cool tensions that erupted after last week’s rejection of a new Constitution.
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/ 28 November 2005
Kenya’s opposition vowed on Monday to defy a government ban on demonstrations and keep up demands for President Mwai Kibaki to call new elections after last week’s rejection of a new Constitution he backed. Leaders of the Orange Democratic Movement said the ban is illegal.
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/ 26 November 2005
Stung by the rejection of a new Constitution he backed, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki has moved to restore flagging confidence in his leadership with a pair of tough political moves, analysts said on Friday. Kibaki sacked his entire Cabinet and then suspended next week’s planned reopening of Parliament.
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/ 24 November 2005
Kenya’s opposition on Thursday demanded that embattled President Mwai Kibaki dissolve Parliament and call snap elections after he fired his Cabinet in response to the embarrassing rejection this week of a new Constitution he backed. At the same time, debate raged over the firings, with some saying the step was illegal.
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/ 23 November 2005
A dozen West African countries have signed a wide-ranging accord to conserve dwindling elephant populations devastated by poaching, conflict and habitat loss, the United Nations said on Wednesday. The 12 nations are now home to fewer than 13Â 000 elephants due to the combined effect of those dangers.
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/ 22 November 2005
The United States and international maritime authorities have boosted already-dire piracy warnings for vessels off the coast of lawless Somalia following a surge in attempted hijackings. In a new alert, the US Office of Naval Intelligence said ships in the region should stay at least 200 nautical miles (370km) from the coast.
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/ 22 November 2005
Kenyan voters soundly rejected a proposed new Constitution in a landmark referendum, dealing a major blow to President Mwai Kibaki, who supported the draft, according to official results released on Tuesday. Kibaki had invested heavy political capital leading the ”yes” campaign ahead of presidential elections due in 2007.
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/ 22 November 2005
Kenyan voters appear to have rejected a proposed new Constitution in a landmark referendum after a vitriolic campaign that deeply split the East African country, an election official said on Tuesday. In a major blow to President Mwai Kibaki, the official said near-complete results showed the ”no”-vote with an insurmountable lead.
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/ 21 November 2005
Kenyans voted peacefully on Monday in a constitutional referendum amid fears of violence after a bitterly contested campaign for the first major change to the country’s charter since independence. Long lines were seen at polling stations as up to 11,6-million voters queued to cast ballots on the draft.
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/ 17 November 2005
The pirates audacious enough to raid an oil tanker off Iraq — where the United States military patrols — were anything but the stuff of romance and legend. The three boarded armed with machine guns and knives, according to a recent report by a shipping industry agency that tracks piracy.
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/ 15 November 2005
The power of microcredit to pull people out of destitution has been celebrated around the world during 2005, designated the ”International Year of Microcredit” by the United Nations. In Kenya, however, the concept of microcredit risks losing its bloom.
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/ 10 November 2005
A 11-nation summit on restoring stability to Africa’s Great Lakes region, earlier scheduled for December in Kenya, has been postponed to the second half of next year due to rescheduled elections in Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Nations announced on Thursday.
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/ 8 November 2005
Science institutions in Africa must do more to ensure their research is put to practical use against agricultural, health and other problems, and governments must invest more in research if they want to develop, officials said. Mohamed Hassan, president of the Nairobi-based African Academy of Sciences, said such institutions too often do little more than bestow honours on their members.
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/ 3 November 2005
An epidemic of ship hijackings off the coast of lawless Somalia is choking the delivery of relief supplies to more than half-a-million people facing acute food shortages in the country’s southern regions, the World Food Programme warned on Thursday. The agency is seeking alternative avenues of transportation.
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/ 1 November 2005
Two Kenyan Cabinet ministers may be charged with treason for remarks suggesting the East African nation risks a coup if a proposed new Constitution is approved by voters. Police are now collecting evidence against Roads Minister Raila Odinga and Environment Minister Kalonzo Musyoka, who have warned of a possible coup if the draft charter is passed in a November 21 referendum.
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/ 31 October 2005
Frail Musyimi Mbiti lies on a bed that is almost bare, in Mwingi District hospital. His little arms are tied to the bed rail with a dirty piece of cloth as a precautionary measure, failing which he would probably start gnawing on himself. This is the face of a famine that is eating its way through several parts of Kenya.
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/ 27 October 2005
Dozens of people were wounded, one of them seriously, on Thursday in clashes between rival factions in the bitter campaign for next month’s referendum on Kenya’s draft Constitution, police and witnesses said. In addition to the injuries, many caused by machete-wielding rioters, a car belonging to a Kenyan lawmaker was set ablaze when then two camps attacked each other in the west of the country.
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/ 26 October 2005
Kenya on Wednesday lashed out at a senior European Union envoy who warned that the country would lose millions of euros in EU aid if President Mwai Kibaki does not sign a tough new anti-corruption law by year’s end. The Kenyan foreign minister accused the new EU ambassador to Kenya of ”rude and undiplomatic” behaviour.
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/ 25 October 2005
African nations in increasing numbers are slapping bans on poultry imports and stepping up monitoring of wild fowl amid growing fears of outbreaks of a deadly strain of bird flu on the continent. About a dozen countries in Africa have imposed full or partial bans on imports of poultry and poultry products.
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/ 25 October 2005
Kenya could lose millions of euros in European Union budgetary support unless President Mwai Kibaki approves tough anti-corruption measures by the end of the year, a senior EU official said on Tuesday. Earlier this year, the bloc, Kenya’s largest collective donor, warned Kibaki’s government about endemic corruption.
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/ 24 October 2005
An unidentified merchant vessel is feared to have been hijacked in pirate-infested Somali waters in the latest in a surge of attacks on commercial shipping that have sparked dire maritime warnings, an official said on Monday. Contact with the ship, which was transporting cargo from Dubai to Somalia, was lost late last week.
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/ 21 October 2005
With too many weapons, too little food and three factions vying for control, Somalia’s anarchy is fast overwhelming its new government even before it can establish itself in the country. The competition for power could combine with a potential humanitarian crisis for a repeat of the disaster that followed the collapse of Somalia’s last regime in 1991.
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/ 21 October 2005
Official campaigning got under way on Friday for the November 21 referendum on a draft Constitution which has split the ruling National Rainbow Coalition government into opposing factions. If the 12-million electorate vote ”Yes” to the proposed draft, it will be the first overhaul of the Constitution since the country’s independence 42 years ago. But the text, which aims to retain a powerful presidency, has many detractors.
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/ 21 October 2005
Dubbed the ”babies in bags” scandal, the discovery of 15 foetuses last year near a river in Nairobi horrified Kenya — and drew government assurances that illegal abortions would be brought to a halt. A pregnancy can only be terminated in the East African country if it puts a woman’s life in danger.
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/ 19 October 2005
Elections set for March in the volatile Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) could spark ”mass violence” if current conditions in the vast Central African state persist, an influential policy group warned on Wednesday. Failure to address problematic issues could plunge the nation into another cycle of violence, the Brussels-based Crisis Group said.
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/ 14 October 2005
Kenya and Uganda will hand over the management of their railway companies to a private investor when a winning bid for the 25-year contract is announced on Friday, a Kenya Railways spokesperson said. A consortium led by an Indian company, Rail India Technical and Economical Services, is competing for the bid against a consortium led by a South African company, Sheltam Trade Close Corporation.
Scientists have launched a global effort to tackle a fungus they fear could have a catastrophic effect on world wheat production. The Global Rust Initiative will implement recommendations made in a report released in Nairobi, Kenya. Nobel Prize-winning crop scientist Norman Borlaug spoke at the launch of the report.
Behind a dilapidated store in a dusty field at Athi River, an export processing zone on the outskirts of Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, a group of textile factory workers has gathered for a mid-afternoon break. The heat is searing, and the hastily purchased cool drinks quench thirsts. But not tempers.